Budapest and Poland's Wroclaw reinforce their river banks ahead of more
flooding in central Europe
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[September 17, 2024]
By VANESSA GERA
WARSAW, Poland (AP) — Soldiers dropped sandbags from military
helicopters to reinforce river embankments and evacuated residents as
the worst flooding in years spread Tuesday to a broad swath of Central
Europe, taking lives and destroying homes.
Heavy flooding has affected a large part of the region in recent days,
including the Czech Republic, Slovakia and Austria. There have been at
least 16 deaths reported in the flooding, which follow heavy rainfall
across the region.
Other places are now bracing for the flood waves to hit them, including
two central European gems: Budapest, the Hungarian capital on the Danube
River, and Wroclaw, a city in southwestern Poland on the Oder River, its
old town filled with architectural gems.
Hungary's government of Prime Minister Viktor Orbán deployed soldiers to
reinforce barriers along the Danube, and thousands of volunteers
assisted in filling sandbags in dozens of riverside settlements.
In Budapest, authorities closed the city’s lower quays, which are
expected to be breached by rising waters later in the day. The lower
half of the city’s iconic Margaret Island was also closed.
In Wroclaw, firefighters and soldiers spent the night using sandbags to
reinforce river embankments. The city zoo, located along the Oder,
appealed for volunteers to fill sandbags on Tuesday morning.
“We and our animals will be extremely grateful for your help,” the zoo
said in its appeal.
The city said it expected the flood wave to peak there around Friday,
though some had predicted that would happen sooner. Poland's Prime
Minister Donald Tusk met with a crisis team early Tuesday and said there
are contradictory forecasts from meteorologists.
Tusk's government has declared a state of natural disaster across the
affected region of southern Poland.
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This handout photo provided by the Polish fire department, shows a
flooded area near the Nysa Klodzka river in Nysa, Poland on Monday,
Sept. 16, 2024. (KG PSP Photo via AP)
To the south of Wroclaw, residents spent the night fighting to save Nysa,
a town of 44,000 people, after the Nysa Klodzka River broke its banks
the day before. The town mayor Kordian Kolbiarz said 2,000 “women, men,
children, the elderly” came out to try to save their town from the
rising waters, forming a human chain that passed sandbags to the river
bank.
“We simply … did everything we could," Kolbiarz wrote on Facebook. "This
chain of people fighting for our Nysa was incredible. Thank you. We
fought for Nysa. Our home. Our families. Our future.”
In the Czech Republic, waters have been receding in the two hardest-hit,
northeast regions. The government approved the deployment of 2,000
troops to help with clean-up efforts. The damage is expected to reach
billions of euros.
The Czech government also scrambled to help local authorities organize
regional elections on Friday and Saturday as several schools and other
buildings serving as polling stations have been badly damaged. However,
a planned evacuation of some 1,000 in the town of Veseli nad Luznici
could be postponed as the waters had not reached critical levels so far.
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Associated Press writers Justin Spike in Budapest, Hungary, and Karel
Janicek in Prague contributed to this report.
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